How "Open Source" Seed Producers from the U.S. to India Are Changing Global Food Production
Around the world, plant breeders are resisting what they see as corporate control of the food supply by making seeds available for other breeders to use.
Frank Morton has been breeding lettuce since the 1980s. His company offers 114 varieties, among them Outredgeous, which last year became the first plant that NASA astronauts grew and ate in space. For nearly 20 years, Morton’s work was limited only by his imagination and by how many different kinds of lettuce he could get his hands on. But in the early 2000s, he started noticing more and more lettuces were patented, meaning he would not be able to use them for breeding.
The patents weren’t just for different types of lettuce, but specific traits such as resistance to a disease, a particular shade of red or green, or curliness of the leaf. Such patents have increased in the years since, and are encroaching on a growing range of crops, from corn to carrots — a trend that has plant breeders, environmentalists and food security experts concerned about the future of the food production. A determined fellow dedicated to the millennia-old tradition of plant breeding, Morton still breeds lettuce — it just takes longer, because more restrictions make it harder for him to do his work.
“It’s just a rock in the river and I’m floating around it. That’s basically what we have to do, but it breaks the breeding tradition,” he says. “I think these lettuce patents are overreaching and if they [were to hold up in court], nobody can breed a new lettuce anymore because all the traits have been claimed.” He continues to work with what is available, breeding for traits he desires while being extra careful to avoid any material restricted by intellectual property rights. He has also joined a movement that is growing in the U.S. and around the world: “open source” breeding...
- Tags:
- Action Group on Erosion Technology and Concentration
- agricultural chemicals
- Bayer
- biodiversity
- breeding natural resistance into crops
- Carly Scaduto
- Carol Deppe
- Centre for Sustainable Agriculture
- ChemChina
- Claire Luby
- climate change
- collaboration
- community seed bank operators
- control of the food system
- corporate control of the food supply
- crop-trait patents
- East Africa
- environmental protection
- environmental sustainability
- Ethiopia
- European Commission
- European Patent Office
- European Union (EU)
- farmers’ rights
- food production
- food security
- Frank Morton
- free and open source software (FOSS)
- gene banks
- genetic diversity
- genetic variation
- genetically modified organisms (GMOs)
- Global Alliance for the Future of Food
- Hivos
- India
- Innovation
- intellectual property rights
- Jack Kloppenburg
- McKnight Foundation
- Monsanto
- non-governmental organizations (NGOs)
- Open Source breeding
- Open Source Seed Initiative
- open-source seed movement
- OSSI
- Outredgeous
- patented plants
- plant breeders
- plant variety protection
- Rachel Cernansky
- Seed Map Project
- Syngenta
- U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
- USC Canada
- Willy Douma
- WK Kellogg Foundation
- Login to post comments